The Niggerization of America

"Against a historical backdrop of a people who have been so terrorized, traumatized and stigmatized that we have been taught to be scared, intimidated, always afraid, distrustful of one another and disrespectful of one another.

When you niggerized you unsafe,unprotected,subject to random violence,hated for who you are and you become so scared that you defer to the powers that be and are willing to consent to your own domination"

Cornell West

Saturday, August 17, 2013

Guilty plea by New Orleans officer in 2012 drug raid death; apologizes to slain man's family

A measure of justice for the family of unarmed shooting victim Wendell Allen


By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN Associated Press
August 16, 2013 - 3:54 pm EDT

NEW ORLEANS — A New Orleans police officer apologized in court Friday to the family of the unarmed man he shot to death during a 2012 drug raid, then was led off in handcuffs to begin a four-year sentence after pleading guilty to manslaughter.

Joshua Colclough entered the plea before state Judge Keva Landrum-Johnson as family members of 20-year-old Wendell Allen looked on. Colclough apologized to the family for the second time in as many days. Attorneys said he met with Allen's family members at their lawyers' offices on Thursday — the same day he formally resigned from the New Orleans Police Department.

Natasha Allen, the victim's mother, said the shooting devastated her family. However, she said she forgave the officer.

"What I'm doing for you Mr. Colclaugh, is what my son would have done for you," she said.
District Attorney Leon Cannizzaro said in court that Allen was shot when police raided a home in New Orleans' Gentilly neighborhood in March 2012. Authorities at the time said the investigation involved marijuana.

Allen was at the top of the stairway when he was shot in the chest.

"Wendell Allen was only wearing a pair of pants when he appeared to the officers," Cannizzaro told the judge.

Defense attorney Claude Kelly said the shooting resulted from a split-second decision by the 29-year-old Colclaugh.

"Josh will live with this as will the Allen family, until the day he dies," Kelly said in court.
Friday's plea hearing came a day after Colclaugh met with Allen family members and tearfully apologized. WVUE-TV was present and recorded it.

"I wanted to tell you for a very long time how sorry I am. I am so very sorry," he said during that meeting.

"I prayed for you. I prayed God have mercy on your soul, but what took you so long?" Natasha Allen said at one point, also crying.

"I am so sorry it took so long. I'm very sorry for what I've put your family through," Colclough said.

In August 2012, an Allen family attorney said Colclough had been expected to sign a plea agreement to negligent homicide but that deal fell apart.

Kelly said Friday that Colclough wasn't psychologically ready to accept a plea deal a year ago but is genuinely remorseful.

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Unarmed Newport News man shot by police tells his story

Corey Moody was shot during a traffic stop in December 2012. Newport News police initially claimed Moody shot at them but no firearm was ever found.








By Ashley K. Speed, akspeed@dailypress.com

NEWPORT NEWS — When the shooting stopped, Corey Moody says police pulled him out of his bullet-ridden car.

He could feel nothing from the waist down. His spinal cord had been struck by police officers' gunfire — gunfire intended for someone who was armed.

"They dragged me out the car and put the gun to my head," Moody said in an interview at his home last week. "They said the best thing for you now is to tell us where the gun at."

There was no gun to show police on Dec. 12, 2012, because Moody was unarmed.

Police say they fired at Moody to protect a fellow officer and because they thought Moody was reaching for a gun in the console of his car.

Hours after the shooting, a doctor told Moody that he wouldn't be able to walk again. Moody, 41, lives in Hampton with his mother, who has taken care of him since the shooting. The two were hopeful that the city would find fault with police for the shooting, but they recently learned that a July report from the prosecutors' office exonerated the officers from any criminal wrongdoing.

The police and city attorney were notified in June that a lawsuit was going to be filed against them. A federal lawsuit will follow later this year alleging a violation of Moody's civil rights, said Timothy Clancy, Moody's attorney.

Clancy says that several explanations of what led to the shooting have come from police — all of which he and Moody deny.

"One story was that Mr. Moody and police exchanged gunfire … then another story was that Mr. Moody was reaching into a console and ignoring police officers — we vehemently deny that,"

Clancy said. "The last story is the allegation that Mr. Moody was dragging a police officer and that somehow justified shooting Mr. Moody and causing him to be paralyzed."

Newport News police spokesman Lou Thurston said department officials declined to comment on the case due to the pending lawsuit. Two phone calls to the prosecutor's office seeking comment were not returned.

State charges go federal

Newport News police detective Danielle Hollandsworth was one of the officers who fired at Moody the night of the shooting, according to a seven-page prosecutor's report.

This wasn't their first encounter. The two had crossed paths in March 2012 at 44th Street and Baughman Court. Hollandsworth had approached Moody while he was in a parked car, and she used his driver's license to check for outstanding warrants, according to a federal affidavit.

Hollandsworth saw no active warrants for Moody. She then asked Moody if he had any weapons on him. Moody answered "no," but told her that she could search him.

n Moody's front pants pocket, Hollandsworth found a clear plastic bag "that contained a napkin that emitted a strong chemical odor" associated with the odor of cocaine, according to the affidavit. A spoon with suspected cocaine residue and about $2,321 separated in three bundles was also found.

Later that day, police searched Moody's home in Hampton and confiscated several items, including a 9mm handgun, according to the affidavit. Police also confiscated 170 grams of cocaine. Moody was charged with distribution of cocaine and a firearms offense.

Court records show that charges against Moody were elevated to federal offenses in late October. When a defendants' case is transferred from state court to federal court, the federal warrant is often served on the defendant during his or her state court appearance. Clancy says neither he nor his client was ever notified before the shooting that the charges against Moody had gone federal.

The federal charges made Moody a sought man.

Wanted man

The night of the shooting, Newport News police detectives Hollandsworth and Russel Tinsley were in an unmarked car monitoring city streets after a recent homicide, according to the prosecutors' office report. While on patrol, an agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration contacted Hollandsworth to tell her that Moody was wanted on a federal warrant. The agent gave Hollandsworth a description of a blue BMW they believed Moody was driving.

Police located a car that matched the description, just before 7 p.m. on the 35th Street overpass to Interstate 664. Once spotting the car, officers ran a check of the license plate and saw that it was registered to Moody's mother. They waited for the driver to make a traffic violation before stopping the car, according to the report, which says the driver made an improper lane change.

Hollandsworth recognized Moody when she approached the car.
Officers Randy Gibson and Ryan Norris were on the scene as backup.

The details of what happened next differ between Moody and police.

Officers say that Moody initially complied with an order for him to place his hands on the steering wheel, but then removed his hands and reached for the center console of his car. Moody denies that he reached for the console.

Moody and Clancy declined to give a step-by-step account of what happened the night of the shooting, because of the pending lawsuit. They did provide some details.

Moody said he leaned over into the passenger seat with his hands over his head during the shooting.

"I was laying down when I got shot and my whole body just seemed like …" Moody said, his voice trailing off. "My legs lifted up under the steering wheel."

Moody said that he tried to get away from police by putting the car in neutral.

"I couldn't stop the car and they were still shooting through the car," Moody said. "I just kept on hearing bullets coming through the car … I feared for my life…They laid me on the cement and put a machine gun to my head. They said the only thing that can help you right now is to tell me where the gun is at?"

Moody told police he didn't have a gun.

Police initially said there was an exchange of gunfire between police and Moody. A day after the shooting police said no other weapons had been recovered except for the officers' guns.

Nearly a week later, police released a statement saying, "It does not appear that the suspect fired a weapon."

An unarmed man

After Moody was pulled over, Tinsley came to the driver's window and asked Moody to keep his hands on the steering wheel, according to the report.

Moody "initially complied" until Tinsley attempted to place handcuffs on his left wrist.

"Moody immediately jerked his left hand away and then reached toward the center console with both hands," according to the report. "Tinsley repeatedly commanded, 'Don't reach!' Tinsley did not know what Moody was reaching for."

Tinsley leaned into the car, grabbed Moody's shirt and arm, but was not able to detain him, according to the report, which says that Moody grabbed the emergency brake, pushed the lever down "while continuing to reach for something in the center console."
"Hollandsworth could hear Tinsley repeating the commands to Moody, 'Don't reach!' as Moody continued to struggle with Tinsley," the report states.

Moody "ignored the repeated commands" and continued to reach his hands down and toward the center console, the report states. Hollandsworth, who was on the rear driver side, fired one shot into the car. Her shot didn't hit Moody.

"Gibson stated he saw Tinsley falling and it looked as if he went below the window line of the car," according to the report. "Gibson was concerned that Tinsley would be run over or dragged by Moody. Gibson continued to command Moody to stop.

As Moody was attempting to drive away, Gibson fired his weapon."
Gibson, who was on the passenger side of the car, fired his gun four times, according to the report. Two of the bullets hit Moody in the back and thigh.

During the shooting Tinsley was hit by "multiple bullet fragments," causing cuts to his face and a fractured nose, according to the report. Initially police were investigating whether a gunshot had caused his injuries.

Deadly force warranted?

"There was absolutely no reason to send two unmarked cars, wait to pull over an unsuspecting Mr. Moody, armed to the teeth, and engage in this behavior that led to my client being in a wheelchair," Clancy said.

The prosecutors' office ruled the amount of force used by officers was not excessive.

"From the perspective of both Detective Hollandsworth and Detective Gibson, probable cause existed to believe that Corey Moody posed a threat of serious physical harm to Detective Tinsley and, therefore, the use of deadly force was legally permissible to prevent that harm," according to the report.

All four officers involved in the shooting have returned to work.
In Newport News, officers are allowed to use deadly force under three circumstances, according to the department's operational manual:

•To protect the officer or another person from what is reasonably believed to be an immediate threat of death.

•To prevent the escape of a fleeing felon when an officer has probable cause that the suspect will pose a significant threat to human life.

•To destroy an animal that represents an immediate threat to public safety.

There are limitations on officers' ability to use deadly force.
According to the manual, officers are not allowed to shoot from a moving vehicle except as a last resort, or shoot at a person in a moving vehicle if it is driven in a way that could harm the officer or others.

"I don't think an officer has to see a gun," said Mengyan Dai, an assistant professor in the sociology and criminology department at Old Dominion University. "Based on their experience, they can make good judgment about what to do next."

Dai said it's enough for an officer who "perceives a threat" to fire his or her weapon.

Ronald Bacigal, a professor at the University of Richmond School of Law, said a lot of cases involving police come down to "he said, she said. If you don't have film to go on or a witness, it's a question of 'Who do you believe?' "

Bacigal said more and more police agencies are getting cameras to prevent "he said, she said" situations.

There were no cameras the night of the shooting, Thurston said. Newport News police are in the process of getting more cameras for their officers. More than 40 officers are equipped with cameras that they wear on their bodies to record every interaction with the public.

In Newport News and Hampton, police-involved shootings are investigated by the prosecutors' office, which is the case for many cities across the country. Some localities will ask another outside agency to investigate these types of cases. The commonwealth's attorney's office rendered its report based on information provided by Newport News police about the shooting.

Moody was not consulted for his version of the shooting.

"No one reached out to Mr. Moody, his family, his attorney and asked for his side of events before the police were exonerated," Clancy said.

"Mr. Moody's redress is going to be in a federal courtroom seeking damages for what the police officers and the city of Newport News did."

'My life has changed'

There are moments of anger when Moody discusses the shooting, but other emotions are more noticeable. His tone is heavy with sadness and disappointment. He is a soft-spoken man who doesn't raise his voice even while retelling noticeably tough memories.

Though he had no feeling in his legs after the shooting, Moody wasn't thinking he would be paralyzed. He thought it was a temporary injury that could be fixed at the hospital. A few hours after being in the hospital, the doctor came to talk to him.

"He came in there, ran me through the machine and said, 'I don't' think you're going to be able to walk again.' It was devastating," Moody said.

The bullet is still wedged in his back. Doctors won't remove it because it could cause more damage, said his mother, Shirley Johnson. Most days he spends in the bed. When he's not sleeping, he's back in his wheelchair.

The long stints in the chair have caused painful bed sores that his mother treats to make sure they don't worsen. He goes outside occasionally using a wheelchair ramp built onto the back of the one-story house.

His medical bills are in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. Moody uses Medicaid to fund his care. He no longer goes to physical therapy, but wants to return in the future.

Moody's federal charges are pending, with no new court date set.
Johnson said her faith in God has sustained her through her son's injury. Johnson says she has had to care for other family members with health needs before the shooting. She gets up every day around 6 a.m. to get herself ready for the day. She wakes Moody an hour later. The task of getting clean for the day is not simple. Getting Moody prepared to take a bath can take up to 15 minutes.

"I have to dress him every day, put him in the tub," Johnson said. "We don't really have the facilities to do that because the wheelchair is too large for the bathroom door and I'm pulling on him with another little scooter pushing him in the bathroom. Then I have to lift his legs over that, then he has to pull up around my neck and I have to set him on the chair to get a bath."

Moody is silent as his mother explains their bath routine.

"It's devastating," Moody says. "My life has changed."

How the System Worked: The US v. Trayvon Martin

In 2012 alone, police officers, security guards or vigilantes took the lives of 136 unarmed black men and women—

by Robin D. G. Kelley, who teaches at UCLA, is the author of the remarkable biography Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original (2009) and most recently Africa Speaks, America Answers: Modern Jazz in Revolutionary Times (2012).

In the aftermath of the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre, Texas Congressman Louie Gohmert, Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell, Senator Rand Paul, Florida State Representative Dennis Baxley (also sponsor of his state’s Stand Your Ground law), along with a host of other Republicans, argued that had the teachers and administrators been armed, those twenty little kids whose lives Adam Lanza stole would be alive today. Of course, they were parroting the National Rifle Association’s talking points. The NRA and the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), the conservative lobbying group responsible for drafting and pushing “Stand Your Ground” laws across the country, insist that an armed citizenry is the only effective defense against imminent threats, assailants, and predators.

But when George Zimmerman fatally shot Trayvon Martin, an unarmed, teenage pedestrian returning home one rainy February evening from a neighborhood convenience store, the NRA went mute. Neither NRA officials nor the pro-gun wing of the Republican Party argued that had Trayvon Martin been armed, he would be alive today. The basic facts are indisputable: Martin was on his way home when Zimmerman began to follow him—first in his SUV, and then on foot. Zimmerman told the police he had been following this “suspicious-looking” young man. Martin knew he was being followed and told his friend, Rachel Jeantel, that the man might be some kind of sexual predator. At some point, Martin and Zimmerman confronted each other, a fight ensued, and in the struggle Zimmerman shot and killed Martin.

Zimmerman pursued Martin. This is a fact. Martin could have run, I suppose, but every black man knows that unless you’re on a field, a track, or a basketball court, running is suspicious and could get you a bullet in the back. The other option was to ask this stranger what he was doing, but confrontations can also be dangerous—especially without witnesses and without a weapon besides a cell phone and his fists. Florida law did not require Martin to retreat, though it is not clear if he had tried to retreat. He did know he was in imminent danger.

Where was the NRA on Trayvon Martin’s right to stand his ground? What happened to their principled position? Let’s be clear: the Trayvon Martin’s of the world never had that right because the “ground” was never considered theirs to stand on. Unless black people could magically produce some official documentation proving that they are not burglars, rapists, drug dealers, pimps or prostitutes, intruders, they are assumed to be “up to no good.” (In the antebellum period, such documentation was called “freedom papers.”) As Wayne LaPierre, NRA’s executive vice president, succinctly explained their position, “The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.” Trayvon Martin was a bad guy or at least looked and acted like one. In our allegedly postracial moment, where simply talking about racism openly is considered an impolitic, if not racist, thing to do, we constantly learn and re-learn racial codes. The world knows black men are criminal, that they populate our jails and prisons, that they kill each other over trinkets, that even the celebrities among us are up to no good. Zimmerman’s racial profiling was therefore justified, and the defense consistently employed racial stereotypes and played on racial knowledge to turn the victim into the predator and the predator into the victim. In short, it was Trayvon Martin, not George Zimmerman, who was put on trial. He was tried for the crimes he may have committed and the ones he would have committed had he lived past 17. He was tried for using lethal force against Zimmerman in the form of a sidewalk and his natural athleticism.

The successful transformation of Zimmerman into the victim of black predatory violence was evident not only in the verdict but in the stunning Orwellian language defense lawyers Mark O’Mara and Don West employed in the post-verdict interview. West was incensed that anyone would have the audacity to even bring the case to trial—suggesting that no one needs to be held accountable for the killing of an unarmed teenager. When O’Mara was asked if he thought the verdict might have been different if his client had been black, he replied: “Things would have been different for George Zimmerman if he was black for this reason: he would never have been charged with a crime.” In other words, black men can go around killing indiscriminately with no fear of prosecution because there are no Civil Rights organizations pressing to hold them accountable.

And yet, it would be a mistake to place the verdict at the feet of the defense for its unscrupulous use of race, or to blame the prosecution for avoiding race, or the jury for insensitivity, or even the gun lobby for creating the conditions that have made the murder of young black men justifiable homicide. The verdict did not surprise me, or most people I know, because we’ve been here before. We were here with Latasha Harlins and Rodney King, with Eleanor Bumpurs and Michael Stewart. We were here with Anthony Baez, Michael Wayne Clark, Julio Nunez, Maria Rivas, Mohammed Assassa. We were here with Amadou Diallo, the Central Park Five, Oscar Grant, Stanley “Rock” Scott, Donnell “Bo” Lucas, Tommy Yates. We were here with Angel Castro, Jr. Bilal Ashraf, Anthony Starks, Johnny Gammage, Malice Green, Darlene Tiller, Alvin Barroso, Marcillus Miller, Brenda Forester. We’ve been here before with Eliberto Saldana, Elzie Coleman, Tracy Mayberry, De Andre Harrison, Sonji Taylor, Baraka Hall, Sean Bell, Tyisha Miller, Devon Nelson, LaTanya Haggerty, Prince Jamel Galvin, Robin Taneisha Williams, Melvin Cox, Rudolph Bell, Sheron Jackson. And Jordan Davis, killed in Jacksonville, Florida, not long after Trayvon Martin. His murderer, Michael Dunn, emptied his gun into the parked SUV where Davis and three friends sat because they refused to turn down their music. Dunn is invoking “stand your ground” in his defense.

The list is long and deep. In 2012 alone, police officers, security guards or vigilantes took the lives of 136 unarmed black men and women—at least twenty-five of whom were killed by vigilantes. In ten of the incidents, the killers were not charged with a crime, and most of those who were charged either escaped conviction or accepted reduced charges in exchange for a guilty plea. And I haven’t included the reign of terror that produced at least 5,000 legal lynchings in the United States, or the numerous assassinations—from political activists to four black girls attending Sunday school in Birmingham fifty years ago.

The point is that justice was always going to elude Trayvon Martin, not because the system failed, but because it worked. Martin died and Zimmerman walked because our entire political and legal foundations were built on an ideology of settler colonialism—an ideology in which the protection of white property rights was always sacrosanct; predators and threats to those privileges were almost always black, brown, and red; and where the very purpose of police power was to discipline, monitor, and contain populations rendered a threat to white property and privilege. This has been the legal standard for African Americans and other racialized groups in the U.S. long before ALEC or the NRA came into being. We were rendered property in slavery, and a threat to property in freedom. And during the brief moment in the 1860s and ‘70s, when former slaves participated in democracy, held political offices, and insisted on the rights of citizenship, it was a well-armed (white) citizenry that overthrew democratically-elected governments in the South, assassinated black political leaders, stripped African-Americans of virtually all citizenship rights (the franchise, the right of habeas corpus, right of free speech and assembly, etc.), and turned an entire people into predators. (For evidence, read the crime pages of any urban newspaper during the early 20th century. Or just watch the hot new show, “Orange is the New Black.”)

If we do not come to terms with this history, we will continue to believe that the system just needs to be tweaked, or that the fault lies with a fanatical gun culture or a wacky right-wing fringe. We will miss the routine character of such murders: according data compiled by the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement, a black person is killed by the state or by state-sanctioned violence every 28 hours. And we will miss how this history of routine violence has become a central component of the U.S. drone warfare and targeted killing. What are signature strikes if not routine, justified killings of young men who might be Al-caeda members or may one day commit acts of terrorism? It is little more than a form of high-tech racial profiling.

In the end, we should be able to prevent another Sandy Hook school tragedy—and the $7.7 million dollars that poured into Newtown on behalf of the victims suggests a real will to do all we can to protect the innocent. But, sadly, the trial of Travyon Martin reminds us, once again, that our black and brown children must prove their innocence every day. We cannot change the situation by simply finding the right legal strategy. Unless we challenge the entire criminal justice system and mass incarceration, there will be many more Trayvon Martins and a constant dread that one of our children might be next. As long as we continue to uphold and defend a system designed to protect white privilege, property and personhood, and render black and brown people predators, criminals, illegals, and terrorists, we will continue to attend funerals and rallies; watch in stunned silence as another police officer or vigilante is acquitted after taking another young life; allow our government to kill civilians in our name; and inherit a society in which our prisons and jails become the largest, most diverse institutions in the country.

www.truthatlarge.blogspot.com
WAR INNA BABYLON

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Utah police shooting called unjustified: Lawsuit alleges victim was shot in the back of her head, "assassination style."

By MICHELLE L. PRICE, Associated Press


SALT LAKE CITY (AP)
Danielle Willard
— A Utah prosecutor ruled Thursday that the shooting of an unarmed 21-year-old woman by police last November was unjustified.
 
For months, Salt Lake County District Attorney Sim Gill has been reviewing the killing of Danielle Willard, which triggered an internal investigation by West Valley City Police that uncovered misconduct by the department's now-disbanded drug squad.
 
District Attorney Sam Gill
Gill said at a news conference Thursday that the use of deadly force by two police detectives was not legally justified. He said he will launch a second investigation to determine if the shooting warrants criminal charges against the officers.
 
West Valley City police are wrapping up their own review into whether the officers violated department policy, which the department would use to determine whether or not the officers can keep their jobs, Deputy Chief Mike Powell said at the news conference.
Willard's family has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the city and police officers, calling her death an "execution."
 
The detectives fired six shots at Willard inside her car in the parking lot of an apartment complex during a narcotics stakeout, according to a 40-page report from the district attorney.
It was Detective Shaun Cowley's first shot that struck Willard in the head, killing her. Another shot from Detective Kevin Salmon grazed her chin, according to Gill.
 
Willard was trying to back up and take off, and the officers claimed she was about to run them over.
Gill said the evidence disputes the claim that the detectives' lives were in danger.
Cowley's attorney, Lindsay Jarvis, told KUTV-TV on Thursday that she disagreed with the ruling and said that the county attorney did not take all of the scientific evidence into account.
 
"Mr. Gill has completely done away with any of those findings in his decision today to determine that this is absolutely unjustified," she said.
Brett Rawson, an attorney for the state police union, told the station that he believes the officers rightly felt they were in danger.

"I certainly believe that Shaun Cowley thought that he was going to be hit and either seriously injured or killed by that car," Rawson said. "And I absolutely believe that Kevin Salmon thought that his partner was going down."
 
Jarvis and Rawson didn't immediately return messages from The Associated Press. It wasn't clear if Salmon had a lawyer. No phone listing could be found for either officer.

The investigation into Willard's shooting led local and federal prosecutors to drop more than 100 cases investigated by the West Valley drug squad, citing a lack of credible evidence. The police department found officers had mishandled evidence, kept souvenirs from drug busts and possibly lost drugs and money, among other issues.
 
Willard's family drew a link between the issues uncovered in the internal review and the woman's death in the lawsuit filed back in June.
 
The lawsuit alleges that Willard was shot in the back of her head, "assassination style."
 
The "execution of Danielle Willard was without justification, unrelated to any legitimate law enforcement purpose, and done purposefully and/or in reckless disregard of her safety and well-being," the lawsuit said.
 
In a statement Thursday, Willard's mother said the rest of Willard's family appreciates Gill's ruling, and that the findings "confirm what we have always known."
Cowley and Salmon have been on administrative leave since the shooting. Seven other officers on the narcotics unit were placed on leave in April, shortly after the department released the results of its internal investigation.

www.truthatlarge.blogspot.com
WAR INNA BABYLON

Grand Jury Declines to Re-Indict Cop in Shooting of Unarmed Teen Ramarley Graham

NBC4 News

The 18-year-old was unarmed when he was shot to death in the bathroom of his Bronx home last February.


Murdering cop Richard Haste

Unarmed Remarley Graham murdered

A grand jury has decided not re-indict an NYPD officer in the fatal shooting of an unarmed 18-year-old in his Bronx home last year.

Officer Richard Haste was indicted last summer on manslaughter charges in the death of 18-year-old Ramarley Graham. Haste pursued Graham into his apartment and shot him in the bathroom. He said he believed the teen was armed.

The initial charges were dropped in May. The judge said prosecutors had improperly left the grand jury with the impression it should not consider testimony by other officers, who had said they radioed Haste to warn him they thought Graham was armed.

Bronx District Attorney Robert Johnson said in a statement Thursday he was "surprised and shocked" by the grand jury's finding. He also said he believed the judge's decision to dismiss the initial indictment had been "overly cautious."

The second grand jury, when given the proper instructions, acted "courageously," said Patrick Lynch, the president of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association.
"He was facing the same imminent danger that all police officers face as we fight to rid our neighborhoods of dangerous, illegal guns," Lynch said.

Graham's family led a demonstration Thursday of about 100 people including mayoral candidate William Thompson and Comptroller candidate Scott Stringer. They called for justice and compared the case to that of George Zimmerman, who was acquitted of manslaughter in Florida in the death of unarmed Trayvon Martin.

"Richard Haste broke into our home and killed my son in cold blood," said his mother, Constance Malcolm, demanding an immediate federal investigation.
His father, Franclot Graham, said he feels like he lost his son all over again because the officer will go free.

"I have so much pain and anger inside me," Graham said.
Haste may still face internal charges.
Graham was shot in the chest in the second-floor bathroom of his home on East 229th Street after police chased him inside. Security video showed the teen entering his home, and police running after him. He died shortly after the shooting.

Police said later that Graham was not found with a gun.


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WAR INA BABYLON

Monday, August 5, 2013

Black Hole Commentary

by D.Large

The hauntings of authoritarian repressive rule by police in this country pales over us like a death shadow.

Our constitutional liberties are ignored. We live under the rigid bonds of profiling and control.  We are a caged enemy subject to wanton random police violence like unarmed teenager Remarley Graham who was shot and killed in his own bathroom and Ayianna Stanley Jones killed while sleeping on a sofa.  Kenneth Chamberlain knew death was at his door when the police shouted, "Fuck you nigga open up the door", within moments Chamberlain was shot and killed by police.

Our lives are not safe even within the confines of our own home.

There is whole scale war being waged in this country by police against black and brown people of color in their communities. This war is not televised nor discussed by pundits  in the media. No embedded reporters only the "shock and awe" that grief stricken families experiece when hearing another unarmed loved one has been shot and killed by police or vigilante. 

While the causualties of this war silently continue the gaiety of life drowns out the carnage.

We act and want to be treated like civilians and law abiding citizens but what we fail to understand is that we are viewed as the enemy. Our communities are war zones patrolled by police who recgonize that demarcation line of race which fuels the police attitude of,"us versus them" on the streets.

We are the resident, "publically undeclared terrorist", a status that is reflected in the public executions of unarmed individuals by police.

War breeds contempt for the enemy and if you are black or brown in this country then you are a potential target. There is no respect for the value of life only the violent submission to the desires of those racially bias police who are protected by the state from any criminal culpability for their murderous acts.

What we learned from the Rodney King video back in 1992 is still prevalent today. White racially bias police officers across this nation have no reservations inflicting severe beatings or pulling the trigger to inflict death on a person of color. This is no more evident than in the increasing number of unarmed victims that have been shot and killed by police in the last ten years.

If Rodney King represented the brutal police treatment in his beating then the death of Oscar Grant ushered in an era where shooting a unarmed black or Hispanic individual is the new law and order and acceptable rule of law in this society.

In war there are no, "Can we all get along" peace offerings which Rodney King desired. There is no neutrality in war especially when you have already been deemed an enemy and criminal by state.

We have a right to defend our families to the death in war.

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WAR INA BABYLON


Ramarley Graham Case: Bronx Judge Throws Out Ramarley Graham Case, Family Vows To Keep Fighting For Slain Son | Breaking News for Black America

Ramarley Graham Case: Bronx Judge Throws Out Ramarley Graham Case, Family Vows To Keep Fighting For Slain Son | Breaking News for Black America

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Black Hole Commentary

 

By D.Large

Jean-Paul Sartre in his preface of Frantz Fannon's book entitled "The Wretched of the Earth," provides a perspective on Fannon's exploration into the racist effects of violence and colonization on the psyche of a nation.
Sartre's analysis may be applied to shed some light on why black men like Lovelle Mixon, Charles Monfort and Maurice Clemmons kill cops in cold blood.
Both Cleammons and Mixon died before they could tell their stories. Monfort may be the only survivor to one day share his motivations to explain the "why" for his actions. Until then we are left to surmise what the troubled rationale was for specifically targeting police as their victims.

 

Sartre suggest that internalized suppressed anger, the result of an oppressed psyche can erupt into an uncontrolled rage.

In the following passage Sartre references to natives is used to describe the original inhabitants of a nation that have been colonized and subject to European rule.

"Yes, terrified; at this fresh stage, colonial aggression turns inward in a current of terror among the natives. By this I do not only mean the fear that they experience when faced with our inexhaustible means of repression but also that which their own fury produces in them. They are cornered between our guns pointed at them and those terrifying compulsions, those desires for murder which spring from the depth of their spirits and which they do not always recognize; for at first it is not their violence, it is ours, which turns back on itself and rends them; and the first action of these oppressed creatures is to bury deep down that hidden anger which their and our moralities condemn and which is however only the last refuge of their humanity. In the period of their helplessness, their mad impulse to murder is the expression of the natives’ collective unconscious."

Mixon and Cleammons were no strangers to the law. They both had criminal histories. It's a fairly easy task to judge and call these men "common criminals" or even "terrorist" as Monfort has been characterized by authorities. The circumstances of their lives that lead these individuals into criminal activity is not clear. Monfort at one time wanted to work in law enforcement. That begs the question, "Why does a man destroy what he once aspired to become?

What we do know about these men is their actions provide a mirror into the nation's violent culture. The hate and anger fused in these men towards the police is systematic of the violent treatment black people have received by the dominant white culture. That violence has never been more evident than in the continued police shootings of unarmed people of color around the country.

Black males have been dehumanized by a society that shows only contempt and hatred towards their humanity. They have been lifted up like some Greek god, but not to glory, but to the personification of evil in this nation.

As Fannon described the attitude of Europeans towards colonized people he stated,

"The native is declared insensible to ethics; he represents not only the absence of values, but also the negation of values. He is . . . the enemy of values . . the absolute evil."
 

When Black men have for years have been viewed in this same vain why is the nation so shocked and dismayed when men like Mixon, Monfort and Cleammons turn their violent hatred on the police?

They only chose to release their hostilities on police because as they represent the most visible and symbolic figures of oppression in this society. And through we may speak of the rule of law and the immorality of their actions their violent acts may have their own expression in a deep seated need to convey their humanity to the rest of us.

If they are monsters then they are the nation's monsters. 

www.truthatlarge.blogspot.com
WAR INA BABYLON








"Living While Black", another reason police use deadly force

"Driving while black" and "walking while black".  We can now officially add, "living while black " because apparently in Florida a black man searching for a pack of cigarettes in his car at night on his mother's property is another reason that police can justify the use of deadly force.

Fortunately, for Roy Middleton, the police were not straight shooters and six of the seven shots fired at him missed their mark. Middleton sustained a gunshot wound in the leg.

Middleton was fortunate because the majority of unarmed victims of police shootings usually don't survive to tell their stories.

The litany of excuses police use to justify their negligent unprofessional performance is as long as the list of unarmed victims that have been shot and killed across the nation. In an earlier article entitled, "Verbal Deathtrap" this writer discussed how police are never required to visually to see a weapon but can be justified in killing an unarmed individual by simply saying, "I feared for my life."

The Florida Escambia police Chief  in this case once again mentioned the "catch all phrase", "My officers feared for their lives," to the media in an attempt to exonerate his officers actions.

What other profession in this country has the discretionary latitude to employ deadly force like the police with only declaring, "I feared for my life."?

Can a truck driver anticipating a wrong maneuver by a car ram his truck into the vehicle killing the occupants then use the excuse, "I feared for my life"?  Can a doctor treating a manic depressive patient decide to overdose the patient on psychotic drugs then say, "I feared for my life."?  Can a lawyer listening to the gruesome details of a serial killer kill the client and then say, "I feared for my life."?

The point here is that police are held at a much lower standard of professionalism when deadly force has resulted in the death of an unarmed individual.

Police advocates contend more training can alleviate these "accidental" shootings. For unarmed victims of police shootings wallets, cell phones, bottles, shiny objects, physical motions and touching the waistband have assumed the normal markers for police as subjective perceived threats. The items being held by a unarmed victim only serve as a secondary excuse for police to shoot.

The real motivation for shooting is the person is Black or Hispanic and in procession of the misidentified items.

More training can only be more effective when police stop profiling people based on stereotypical thinking in viewing all black people as potential criminals and making automatic assumptions they pose an immediate threat to an officer or the public.

But the issue of police killing unarmed individuals goes much deeper than professionalism and training. And as much as people either want to defend police actions, deny or ignore the problem the fact remains:

"Race does matter especially when it comes to white police officers and their high propensity to shoot first in encounters with black people".

If unarmed blacks are being killed at a much higher rate in this country by white police officers than other groups of individuals then what other plausible explanation explains the disparity?


www.truthatlarge.blogspot.com
WAR INNA BABYLON

Eyewitness Records Santa Ana Cop Shoot, Kill Unarmed Homeless Man




SANTA ANA (CBSLA.com) — Santa Ana police confirmed Wednesday that an officer shot and killed an unarmed 22-year-old homeless man after a short foot pursuit at a shopping center 24 hours ago.
Hans Kevin Arellano was shot once in the chest when he got into a confrontation with a female 13-year veteran officer in a juice shop parking lot near South Harbor Boulevard and McFadden Avenue, according to Santa Ana interim Police Chief Carlos Rojas.
Rojas said Arellano was “combative” when he initially got into altercations with various people in a McDonald’s parking lot around 3 p.m.
When authorities arrived to the scene, Arellano ran to nearby Jugo’s La Tropicana, where the shooting unfolded.
“It was a confrontation. It wasn’t a casual conversation,” Rojas said.
When asked why the officer didn’t Taser the suspect, Rojas said, “Could the officer have had other options? There’s always a lot of different options you have in these situations. It really comes down to the mindset of the officer at that time and what threat they may have been facing.”
The police chief said Arellano had contact with the police in the past. He was convicted in a prior burglary case. Prior to his death, the father of two had also been identified in a photo lineup as a wanted suspect in a recent robbery.
CBS2’s Michele Gile reported that for the past few weeks, Arellano had been living behind a furniture store with other homeless friends.
“Why would they pull out a gun instead of Tasering him? Why couldn’t they Taser him? He was only 22 years old. He acted not even his age. He acted like a 10-year-old,” a woman said.
Arellano’s sister, Tania, was devastated by her brother’s death.
“He never carried weapons. He always came to the house. I have four kids and he was always like, ‘Hey guys! What are you doing?’ As you can see in pictures, he’s always smiling. He had really nice dimples and he was always smiling,” she said.
The officer involved in the shooting is currently on paid leave. She could be back to work in a few days after she’s cleared by a department psychologist.
There are three separate investigations into the shooting.


Monday, July 29, 2013

Sheriff: Deputies said man 'lunged' from car before he was shot in his yard

This is an updated article of a police shooting of a unarmed black man which occurred July 27.
Written by Rhema Thompson
Amid a growing firestorm of criticism, Escambia County Sheriff David Morgan tried to offer some answers today after two deputies shot at and injured an unarmed man in his own driveway.
The story has garnered national attention since Saturday, when 60-year-old Roy Middleton was shot in the leg while rummaging for a loose cigarette in his mother's car. Across the Internet and social media, commenters have lambasted the Escambia County Sheriff's Office and Florida in general. Thousands of comments have been posted about the case on sites such as Facebook, Twitter and Reddit. The story drew more than 15,000 recommends on pnj.com alone.

Deputies Jeremiah Meeks and Matthew White responded to a 911 call on Saturday of a possible burglary and found Roy Middleton, 60, rummaging through a car in the 200 block of Shadow Lawn Lane in Warrington, Morgan said. Middleton was searching for a loose cigarette in his mother’s car.

Read Middleton's account of the shooting.
Morgan said the deputies reported that, after they'd made multiple commands to Middleton to show his hands, he eventually lunged out of the car and spun toward them, causing them to "fear for their safety."

"As much as we are trained and as much as officers -- which have Type A personalities -- like to say we are in control, we are not," Morgan said at the conference.

During an afternoon press conference, Morgan played the 911 call made by a neighbor along with the corresponding radio traffic from officers on the scene.

Middleton has said he was in his mother's car, searching for a cigarette. When he backed out of the vehicle, he had his car keys in his hand with a metal flashlight attached, he told his mother. The deputies opened fire.

It was at that point that Ceola Walker, 77, who was sleeping inside, awoke to the commotion.

“I heard the shots,” she said. “(The deputies) told me to close the door and not come out. They called an ambulance for him.”

Middleton suffered shattered bones in his left thigh that will require the insertion of a metal rod.
www.truthatlarge.blogspot.com WAR INNA BABYLON

Monday, July 15, 2013

The Black Hole Commentary: The scales of injustice

This is a rebuttal to comments made by a District Attorney in New York who claimed there was no injustice into the investigation by the District Attorney's office into the police shooting of unarmed Shem Walker.

By D.Large

Mr. Reuland, in your article entitled "No Injustice in Shem Walker Delay", I disagree with your opinion that prosecutorial abuses do not exist in the D.A.'s office when evaluating the merits of pursuing criminal charges and convictions against police officers in unarmed shootings of minorities.

I understand your perspective because you are a white, middle class professional who has more in common culturally with prosecutors and judges than with the majority of the indigent defenders you prosecute; who are minority, poor and of a different social and economic class than yourself.

Finding justice, which is captive to public opinions, bureaucratic policies and self-serving political objectives, becomes even more difficult when the administration of the law becomes tainted and perverted by virtually unlimited authority in the DA's office to work towards exonerating the police instead of seeking justice for the public.

Mr. Reuland you stated, "There is, in theory, an arbiter of who’s right: the criminal justice system and its steward, the district attorney."

The prosecutor's office is not the final arbiter of justice in the criminal justice system. To the contrary, the office should in fact be a facilitator in achieving justice, not just in seeking convictions for its own self-serving purpose. But history has shown that the office uses its wide latitude of discretion to decide if a police officer should be prosecuted and charged, and the decision is impacted by the preferential treatment police officers are accorded over other defendants. Then justice becomes subverted. In the majority of these shootings police walk away unscathed by their criminal actions due to the lack of willingness for prosecutors to search for the truth.

The most poignant example of this abuse is the continued failure of most District Attorneys around the country to even convene a grand jury to hear the facts and evidence in these cases. You find it disturbing that undisputed facts in these cases many times divide people into camps with their impartial views based on race (I assume your reference was to minorities), and those who view what happened as you term (a misunderstanding), the predominant opinion of most white people viewing these cases. Juries should be the arbiters of fact, not public opinion. But aside from the influences of the community, the more troubling matter is that most prosecutors have their own personal agenda, which in most of these police shootings dictates no attention to justice for minorities. It certainly looks more advantageous both publicly and politically to lock up criminals instead of the police.

Mr. Reuland your remark regarding the prosecutors' disregard for prosecuting adultery laws shows your own contempt and melancholy for the serious nature of unarmed victims being gunned down by police. Yes, adultery is still on the books, and prosecuting police for shooting unarmed minorities is ignored just like adultery. Prosecutors have increasingly realized that prosecutions for adultery have had little practical effect in safeguarding the community morals.
But I would remind you that prosecuting a cop for an unjustified killing of an unarmed civilian protects not only the community but sends a greater message to police that their immoral criminal actions will not be tolerated in society. But that is of no consequence because most prosecutors make the conscious decision against investigating police criminal actions for fear of jeopardizing or alienating the cozy non-adversarial relationship that exists between the prosecutor's office and the police. It's just not politically expedient.

Finally Mr. Reuland, you stated, "I see no crime in the death of Shem Walker."
I can understand your position in light of the fact that you have only read the newspapers and have already predisposed yourself to judging the merits of the case based on those readings. From your standpoint it was only an unfortunate misunderstanding that escalated into the circumstances that led Mr. Walker's death.
Mr. Reuland we don't try cases in the newspapers, and given your attitude these cases wouldn't make it to court.

I would suggest that you go and tell the families of unarmed victims, who are devastated by the loss of their loved ones, that it was all a misunderstanding.


www.policeshootminorities.com

The U.S Justice Department investigation into Trayvon Martin shooting will yield same results as police murder of Kenneth Brian Walker

                                  
Civil Rights organizations are calling on the U.S. Justice Department to investigate the Trayvon Martin shooting.

Well lets look at what the U.S. Justice Department determined in the police murder of Kenneth Brian Walker.
After watching this video make your own determination whether this was clearly murder by police of Mr. Walker pictured here with his wife and daughter.

A Muscogee County, Georgia, grand jury refused to indict former Deputy David Glisson in the December 10, 2003, killing of 39-year-old black man Kenneth Walker. Walker was killed by two shots to the head after being pulled out a vehicle drug agents mistakenly thought was that of a Florida drug dealer. He was unarmed. There were no drugs.

The U.S. Department of Justice issued the following press release:

The Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Middle District of Georgia, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) announced today that there is insufficient evidence to pursue federal criminal civil rights charges against a Muscogee County Sheriff's Deputy who shot and killed Kenneth Walker on December 10, 2003.

This will be the same type of press release the U.S Justice Department will release after their investigation into the Trayvon Martin shooting in Florida. www.truthatlarge.blogspot.com

Sunday, July 14, 2013

"They Throw Kids on the Ground, Put Guns to Their Heads" -- The Horrors Unleashed by Police Militarization

"Children and dogs are always the easiest casualties.”
 
SWAT teams burst through doors armed to the teeth, terrifying (and killing) children. How did we get here?

The following is an excerpt from RISE OF THE WARRIOR COP: The Militarization of America's Police Forces by Radley Balko. Reprinted with permission from PublicAffairs Books.

Betty Taylor still remembers the night it all hit her.

As a child, Taylor had always been taught that police officers were the good guys. She learned to respect law enforcement, as she puts it, “all the time, all the way.” She went on to become a cop because she wanted to help people, and that’s what cops did. She wanted to fight sexual assault, particularly predators who take advantage of children. To go into law enforcement—to become one of the good guys—seemed like the best way to accomplish that. By the late 1990s, she’d risen to the rank of detective in the sheriff’s department of Lincoln County, Missouri—a sparsely populated farming community about an hour northwest of St. Louis. She eventually started a sex crimes unit within the department. But it was a small department with a tight budget. When she couldn’t get the money she needed, Taylor was forced to give speeches and write her own proposals to keep her program operating.

What troubled her was that while the sex crimes unit had to find funding on its own, the SWAT team was always flush with cash. “The SWAT team, the drug guys, they always had money,” Taylor says. “There were always state and federal grants for drug raids. There was always funding through asset forfeiture.” Taylor never quite understood that disparity. “When you think about the collateral effects of a sex crime, of how it can affect an entire family, an entire community, it just didn’t make sense. The drug users weren’t really harming anyone but themselves. Even the dealers, I found much of the time they were just people with little money, just trying to get by.”

The SWAT team eventually co-opted her as a member. As the only woman in the department, she was asked to go along on drug raids in the event there were any children inside. “The perimeter team would go in first. They’d throw all of the adults on the floor until they had secured the building. Sometimes the kids too. Then they’d put the kids in a room by themselves, and the search team would go in. They’d come to me, point to where the kids were, and say, ‘You deal with them.’” Taylor would then stay with the children until family services arrived, at which point they’d be placed with a relative.

Taylor’s moment of clarity came during a raid on an autumn evening in November 2000. Narcotics investigators had made a controlled drug buy a few hours earlier and were laying plans to raid the suspect’s home. “The drug buy was in town, not at the home,” Taylor says. “But they’d always raid the house anyway. They could never just arrest the guy on the street. They always had to kick down doors.” With just three hours between the drug buy and the raid, the police hadn’t done much surveillance at all. The SWAT team would often avoid raiding a house if they knew there were children inside, but Taylor was troubled by how little effort they put into seeking out that sort of information. “Three hours is nowhere near enough time to investigate your suspect, to find out who might be inside the house. It just isn’t enough time for you to know the range of things that could happen.”

That afternoon the police had bought drugs from the stepfather of two children, ages eight and six. Both were in the house at the time of the raid. The stepfather wasn’t. “They did their thing,” Taylor says. “Everybody on the floor, guns and yelling. Then they put the two kids in the bedroom, did their search, then sent me in to take care of the kids.”

Taylor made her way inside to see them. When she opened the door, the eight-year-old girl assumed a defense posture, putting her- self between Taylor and her little brother. She looked at Taylor and said, half fearful, half angry, “What are you going to do to us?”

Taylor was shattered. “Here I come in with all my SWAT gear on, dressed in armor from head to toe, and this little girl looks up at me, and her only thought is to defend her little brother. I thought, How can we be the good guys when we come into the house looking like this, screaming and pointing guns at the people they love? How can we be the good guys when a little girl looks up at me and wants to fight me?And for what? What were we accomplishing with all of this? Absolutely nothing.”

Taylor was later appointed police chief of the small town of Winfield, Missouri. Winfield was too small for its own SWAT team, even in the 2000s, but Taylor says she’d have quit before she ever created one. “Good police work has nothing to do with dressing up in black and breaking into houses in the middle of the night. And the mentality changes when they get put on the SWAT team. I remember a guy I was good friends with, it just completely changed him. The us-versus-them mentality takes over. You see that mentality in regular patrol officers too. But it’s much, much worse on the SWAT team. They’re more concerned with the drugs than they are with innocent bystanders. Because when you get into that mentality, there are no innocent people. There’s us and there’s the enemy. Children and dogs are always the easiest casualties.”

Taylor recently ran into the little girl who changed the way she thought about policing. Now in her twenties, the girl told Taylor that she and her brother had nightmares for years after the raid. They slept in the same bed until the boy was eleven. “That was a difficult day at work for me,” she says. “But for her, this was the most traumatic, defining moment of this girl’s life. Do you know what we found? We didn’t find any weapons. No big drug operation. We found three joints and a pipe.”1 ***

POLICE MILITARIZATION WOULD ACCELERATE IN THE 2000S.

The first half of the decade brought a new and lucrative source of funding and equipment: homeland security. In response to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, on the World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon in Washington, the federal government opened a new spigot of funding in the name of fighting terror. Terrorism would also provide new excuses for police agencies across the country to build up their arsenals and for yet smaller towns to start up yet more SWAT teams. The second half of the decade also saw more mission creep for SWAT teams and more pronounced militarization even outside of drug policing. The 1990s trend of government officials using paramilitary tactics and heavy- handed force to make political statements or to make an example of certain classes of nonviolent offenders would continue, especially in response to political protests. The battle gear and aggressive policing would also start to move into more mundane crimes—SWAT teams have recently been used even for regulatory inspections.

But the last few years have also seen some trends that could spur some movement toward reform. Technological advances in personal electronic devices have armed a large percentage of the public with the power to hold police more accountable with video and audio recordings. The rise of social media has enabled citizens to get accounts of police abuses out and quickly disseminated. This has led to more widespread coverage of botched raids and spread awareness of how, how often, and for what purpose this sort of force is being used. Over just the six years I’ve been covering this issue, I’ve noticed that media accounts of drug raids have become less deferential to police. Reporters have become more willing to ask questions about the appropriateness of police tactics and more likely to look at how a given raid fits into broader policing trends, both locally and nationally. Internet commenters on articles about incidents in which police may have used excessive force also seem to have grown more skeptical about police actions, particularly in botched drug raids.

It’s taken nearly a half-century to get from those Supreme Court decisions in the mid-1960s to where we are today—police militarization has happened gradually, over decades. We tend not to take notice of such long-developing trends, even when they directly affect us. The first and perhaps largest barrier to halting police militarization has probably been awareness. And that at least seems to be changing. Whether it leads to any substantive change may be the theme of the current decade.

BY THE MID-1990S, THE BYRNE GRANT PROGRAM CONGRESS had started in 1988 had pushed police departments across the country to prioritize drug crimes over other investigations. When applying for grants, departments are rewarded with funding for statistics such as the number of overall arrests, the number of warrants served, or the number of drug seizures. Those priorities, then, are passed down to police officers themselves and are reflected in how they’re evaluated, reviewed, and promoted. Perversely, actual success in reducing crime is generally not rewarded with federal money, on the presumption that the money ought to go where it’s most needed—high-crime areas. So the grants reward police departments for making lots of easy arrests (i.e., low-level drug offenders) and lots of seizures (regardless of size), and for serving lots of warrants. When it comes to tapping into federal funds, whether any of that actually reduces crime or makes the community safer is irrelevant—and in fact, successfully fighting crime could hurt a department’s ability to rake in federal money.

But the most harmful product of the Byrne grant program may be its creation of hundreds of regional and multijurisdictional narcotics task forces. That term—“narcotics task force”—pops up frequently in the case studies and horror stories throughout this book. There’s a reason for that. While the Reagan and Bush administrations had set up a number of drug task forces in border zones, the Byrne grant program established similar task forces all across the country. They seemed particularly likely to pop up in rural areas that didn’t yet have a paramilitary police team (what few were left).

The task forces are staffed with local cops drawn from the police agencies in the jurisdictions where the task force operates. Some squads loosely report to a state law enforcement agency, but oversight tends to be minimal to nonexistent. Because their funding comes from the federal government—and whatever asset forfeiture proceeds they reap from their investigations—local officials can’t even control them by cutting their budget. This organizational structure makes some task forces virtually unaccountable, and certainly not accountable to any public official in the region they cover.

As a result, we have roving squads of drug cops, loaded with SWAT gear, who get more money if they conduct more raids, make more arrests, and seize more property, and they are virtually immune to accountability if they get out of line. In 2009 the Justice Department attempted a cost-benefit analysis of these task forces but couldn’t even get to the point of crunching the numbers. The task forces weren’t producing any numbers to crunch. “Not only were data insufficient to estimate what task forces accomplished,” the report read, “data were inadequate to even tell what the task forces did for routine work.”

Not surprisingly, the proliferation of heavily armed task forces that have little accountability and are rewarded for making lots of busts has resulted in some abuse.

The most notorious scandal involving these task forces came in the form of a massive drug sting in the town of Tulia, Texas. On July 23, 1999, the task force donned black ski-mask caps and full SWAT gear to conduct a series of coordinated predawn raids across Tulia. By 4:00 AM, forty black people—10 percent of Tulia’s black population—and six whites were in handcuffs.

The Tulia Sentineldeclared, “We do not like these scumbags doing business in our town. [They are] a cancer in our community, it’s time to give them a major dose of chemotherapy behind bars.” The paper followed up with the headline “Tulia’s Streets Cleared of Garbage.”

The raids were based on the investigative work of Tom Coleman, a sort of freelance cop who, it would later be revealed, had simply invented drug transactions that had never occurred. The first trials resulted in convictions—based entirely on the credibility of Tom Coleman. The defendants received long sentences. For those who were arrested but still awaiting trial, plea bargains that let them avoid prison time began to look attractive, even if they were in- nocent. Coleman was even named Texas lawman or the year.

But there were some curious details about the raids. For such a large drug bust, the task force hadn’t recovered any actual drugs. Or any weapons, for that matter. And it wasn’t for a lack of looking. The task force cops had all but destroyed the interiors of the homes they raided. Then some cases started falling apart.

One woman Coleman claimed sold him drugs could prove she was in Oklahoma City at the time. Coleman had described another woman as six months pregnant—she wasn’t. Another suspect could prove he was at work during the alleged drug sale. By 2004, nearly all of the forty-six suspects were either cleared or pardoned by Texas governor Rick Perry. The jurisdictions the task force served eventually settled a lawsuit with the defendants for $6 million. I

In 2005, Coleman was convicted of perjury. He received ten years’ probation and was fined $7,500.3 The following year, it all happened again. In November 2000, SWAT teams from the Byrne-funded South Central Texas Narcotics Task Force rolled into Hearne, a town of about five thousand people in Robertson County, to wage another series of coordinated raids. The raids netted twenty-eight arrests—twenty-seven of the suspects were black.

One of them was Regina Kelly, a single mother. Kelly wasn’t home when her house was raided, she was waiting tables at a local diner. The police marched her off the job in handcuffs and tossed her in a jail cell. She first thought she had been arrested for unpaid parking tickets. Kelly’s court-appointed attorney encouraged her to take a plea bargain. Plead guilty, and she’d get eighteen years’ probation. She’d get no prison time and wouldn’t lose her kids. She refused. “I wasn’t going to plead guilty to something I didn’t do,” she told me in a 2007 interview.

The attorney went back to DA John Paschall, who then offered five years’ probation. Kelly again refused, and told her attorney to ask for the evidence they had used to indict her. Her attorney brought back a tape recording the DA’s office claimed was evidence of her drug sales. The tape recording was a conversation between two men. There were no female voices, and Kelly’s name was never mentioned. Kelly’s bail was then reduced from $70,000 to $10,000. Her parents were able to post bond, and she never had to go to court again. She was eventually cleared of any criminal wrongdoing.

In part because of Kelly’s courageous refusal to accept a plea bargain for a crime she didn’t commit, we now know that all twenty- eight indictments were based on the word of a single confidential informant. Paschall’s office was forced to admit that the informant had both tampered with evidence and failed a polygraph test.

At the civil trial for the lawsuit brought by Kelly and other defendants, the informant testified that Paschall had given him a list of twenty black men. He promised leniency for the informant’s own burglary charge if he helped Paschall convict the men on the list. The informant also testified he was promised $100 for every suspect he helped convict beyond that list of twenty. The lawsuit was settled in 2005. Of the twenty-eight people charged, seventeen were later exonerated.

The 2008 movie American Violet was based on Kelly’s experience after she was arrested. But similar mass round-up raids had been going on in Hearne for fifteen years. “They come on helicopters, military-style, SWAT style,” Kelly told me. “In the apartments I was living in, in the projects, there were a lot of children outside playing. They don’t care. They throw kids on the ground, put guns to their heads. They’re kicking in doors. They just don’t care.”

In the following years, there were numerous other corruption scandals, botched raids, sloppy police work, and other allegations of misconduct against the federally funded task forces in Texas. Things got so that by the middle of the 2000s Gov. Rick Perry began diverting state matching funds away from the task forces to other programs. The cut in funding forced many task forces to shut down. The stream of lawsuits shut down or limited the operations of others.

In 2001 the state had fifty-one federally funded task forces. By the spring of 2006, it was down to twenty-two. Funding for the Byrne grant program had held steady at about $500 million through most of the Clinton administration. Just as it had done with the cops program, the Bush administration began to pare the program down—to about $170 million by 2008. This was more out of an interest in limiting federal influence on law enforcement than concern for police abuse or drug war excesses. But the reaction from law enforcement was interesting.

In March 2008, Byrne-funded task forces across the country staged a series of coordinated drug raids dubbed Operation Byrne Blitz. The intent was to make a series of large drug seizures to demonstrate how important the Byrne grants were to fighting the drug war. In Kentucky alone, for example, task forces uncovered 23 methamphetamine labs, seized more than 2,400 pounds of marijuana, and arrested 565 people for illegal drug use. Of course, if police in a single state could simply go out and find 23 meth labs and 2,400 pounds of marijuana in twenty-four hours just to make a political point about drug war funding, that was probably a good indication that twenty years of Byrne grants and four decades of drug warring hadn’t really accomplished much.

During the 2008 presidential campaign, Barack Obama criticized Bush and the Republicans for cutting Byrne, a federal police program beloved by his running mate Joe Biden. Despite Tulia, Hearne, a growing pile of bodies from botched drug raids, and the objections of groups as diverse as the ACLU, the Heritage Foundation, La Raza, and the Cato Institute, Obama promised to restore full funding to the program, which, he said, “has been critical to creating the anti-gang and anti-drug task forces our communities need.”

He kept his promise. The 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act resuscitated the Byrne grants with a whopping $2 billion infusion, by far the largest budget in the program’s twenty-year history.

EARLY IN THE MORNING OF SEPTEMBER 13, 2000, AGENTS from the DEA, the FBI, and a Stanislaus County, California, narcotics task force conducted raids on fourteen homes in and around Modesto—the culmination of a nineteen-month investigation. One of the homes was that of Moises Sepulveda and his family. According to the Los Angeles Times, the DEA and FBI asked that the local SWAT teams enter each home unannounced in order to secure the area ahead of the federal agents, who would then come to serve the warrants and search for evidence. Federal agents warned the SWAT teams that the targets of the warrants should be considered armed and dangerous. When local police asked if there were any children in the Sepulveda home, the feds answered, “Not aware of any.” There were.

Moises Sepulveda had three children—a daughter and two sons. After the police forcibly entered the Sepulveda home, Moises, his wife, and his children were ordered to lie face-down on the floor with their arms outstretched. They were then told to remain still as officers pointed guns at their heads. Eleven-year-old Alberto was doing just that—lying still under the gun of Officer David Hawn. But shortly after the raid began, Hawn’s gun went off. The boy died instantly. There were no drugs or guns in the Sepulveda home.

A subsequent internal investigation by the Modesto Police Department found that the DEA’s evidence against Moises Sepulveda—who had no previous criminal record—was “minimal.” The city of Modesto and the federal government settled a lawsuit brought by the Sepulvedas for the death of their son for $3 million.

In response to the incident, California attorney general Bill Lockyer assembled a blue ribbon commission to review the procedures, guidelines, and performance of the state’s hundreds of SWAT teams. The Modesto Bee reported in 2001 that the commission would look at the way SWAT teams were deployed, the use of intimidating clothing and equipment, and, in the words of one commissioner, the “overbearing-type attitudes” of SWAT teams.

Unsurprisingly, the commission found that while SWAT teams were generally justified, defended, and regarded as responders to emergency situations like hostage crises and terror attacks, they were most commonly being used to serve drug warrants. Nevertheless, the panel’s final recommendations did little to address the number of SWAT teams, how they were being used, or police militarism in general. The panel’s chief complaint was that SWAT teams were undertrained and underfunded, suggesting that local, state, and federal government should be throwing more funding and resources at SWAT teams, not less.

The other recommendations consisted largely of standardizing procedures, definitions, and guidelines and communicating better with the public. The commission didn’t address any of the more urgent problems that had plagued the state’s SWAT teams over the previous twenty years, such as SWAT teams launching raids based on uncorroborated tips from informants, asset forfeiture incentivizing the use of aggressive policing, or prosecutors and judges neglecting their duty to scrutinize the warrants authorizing these violent raids.

In the end, even if every SWAT team in the state had implemented the panel’s recommendations (and they were by no means obligated to), it’s unlikely that much would have changed. In fact, if the suggestions had been implemented in the 1990s, it seems unlikely that they would have prevented the death of Alberto Sepulveda, the reason for Lockyer’s panel in the first place.

Back in the early 1970s, nationwide outrage over a series of wrong-door drug raids had inspired furious politicians to hastily call congressional hearings; as a consequence, the law that had authorized those raids was repealed.

Now, in 2000, an eleven-year-old boy had just been obliterated at close range with a shotgun as his parents and siblings lay on the ground beside him. And even that wasn’t enough to stop his own town from discontinuing the aggressive tactics that caused his death. The mistakes, the terrorizing of innocents, and the unnecessary fatalities would continue.

Radley Balko is a senior writer and investigative reporter for the Huffington Post.

The Oppression of Black people and the Crimes of this system

“The young man was shot 41 times while reaching for his wallet”…“the 13-year-old was shot dead in mid-afternoon when police mistook his toy gun for a pistol”… “the unarmed young man, shot by police 50 times, died on the morning of his wedding day”… “the young woman, unconscious from having suffered a seizure, was shot 12 times by police standing around her locked car”… “the victim, arrested for disorderly conduct, was tortured and raped with a stick in the back of the station-house by the arresting officers.”

Does it surprise you to know that in each of the above cases the victim was Black?

If you live in the USA, it almost certainly doesn’t.

Think what that means: that without even being told, you knew these victims of police murder and brutality were Black. Those cases—and the thousands more like them that have occurred just in the past few decades—add rivers of tears to an ocean of pain. And they are symptoms of a larger, still deeper problem.

But some today claim that America is a “post-racial society.” They say the “barriers to Black advancement” have been largely overcome. Many go so far as to put the main blame for the severe problems faced by Black people today on…Black people themselves. Others claim that better education, or more traditional families, or religion, or elections will solve things.

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2012: A Brave New Dystopia

by Chris Hedges

“Never again will you be capable of ordinary human feeling. Everything will be dead inside you. Never again will you be capable of love, or friendship, or joy of living, or laughter, or curiosity, or courage, or integrity. You will be hollow. We shall squeeze you empty and then we shall fill you with ourselves.”

The two greatest visions of a future dystopia were George Orwell’s “1984” and Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New World.” The debate, between those who watched our descent towards corporate totalitarianism, was who was right. Would we be, as Orwell wrote, dominated by a repressive surveillance and security state that used crude and violent forms of control? Or would we be, as Huxley envisioned, entranced by entertainment and spectacle, captivated by technology and seduced by profligate consumption to embrace our own oppression? It turns out Orwell and Huxley were both right. Huxley saw the first stage of our enslavement. Orwell saw the second.

We have been gradually disempowered by a corporate state that, as Huxley foresaw, seduced and manipulated us through sensual gratification, cheap mass-produced goods, boundless credit, political theater and amusement. While we were entertained, the regulations that once kept predatory corporate power in check were dismantled, the laws that once protected us were rewritten and we were impoverished. Now that credit is drying up, good jobs for the working class are gone forever and mass-produced goods are unaffordable, we find ourselves transported from “Brave New World” to “1984.” The state, crippled by massive deficits, endless war and corporate malfeasance, is sliding toward bankruptcy. It is time for Big Brother to take over from Huxley’s feelies, the orgy-porgy and the centrifugal bumble-puppy. We are moving from a society where we are skillfully manipulated by lies and illusions to one where we are overtly controlled.



Orwell warned of a world where books were banned. Huxley warned of a world where no one wanted to read books. Orwell warned of a state of permanent war and fear. Huxley warned of a culture diverted by mindless pleasure. Orwell warned of a state where every conversation and thought was monitored and dissent was brutally punished. Huxley warned of a state where a population, preoccupied by trivia and gossip, no longer cared about truth or information. Orwell saw us frightened into submission. Huxley saw us seduced into submission. But Huxley, we are discovering, was merely the prelude to Orwell. Huxley understood the process by which we would be complicit in our own enslavement.

Orwell understood the enslavement. Now that the corporate coup is over, we stand naked and defenseless. We are beginning to understand, as Karl Marx knew, that unfettered and unregulated capitalism is a brutal and revolutionary force that exploits human beings and the natural world until exhaustion or collapse.

“The Party seeks power entirely for its own sake,” Orwell wrote in “1984.” “We are not interested in the good of others; we are interested solely in power. Not wealth or luxury or long life or happiness: only power, pure power. What pure power means you will understand presently. We are different from all the oligarchies of the past, in that we know what we are doing. All the others, even those who resembled ourselves, were cowards and hypocrites. The German Nazis and the Russian Communists came very close to us in their methods, but they never had the courage to recognize their own motives. They pretended, perhaps they even believed, that they had seized power unwillingly and for a limited time, and that just round the corner there lay a paradise where human beings would be free and equal. We are not like that. We know that no one ever seizes power with the intention of relinquishing it. Power is not a means; it is an end. One does not establish a dictatorship in order to safeguard a revolution; one makes the revolution in order to establish the dictatorship. The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power.”


The political philosopher Sheldon Wolin uses the term “inverted totalitarianism” in his book “Democracy Incorporated” to describe our political system. It is a term that would make sense to Huxley. In inverted totalitarianism, the sophisticated technologies of corporate control, intimidation and mass manipulation, which far surpass those employed by previous totalitarian states, are effectively masked by the glitter, noise and abundance of a consumer society. Political participation and civil liberties are gradually surrendered. The corporation state, hiding behind the smokescreen of the public relations industry, the entertainment industry and the tawdry materialism of a consumer society, devours us from the inside out. It owes no allegiance to us or the nation. It feasts upon our carcass.


The corporate state does not find its expression in a demagogue or charismatic leader. It is defined by the anonymity and facelessness of the corporation. Corporations, who hire attractive spokespeople like Barack Obama, control the uses of science, technology, education and mass communication. They control the messages in movies and television. And, as in “Brave New World,” they use these tools of communication to bolster tyranny. Our systems of mass communication, as Wolin writes, “block out, eliminate whatever might introduce qualification, ambiguity, or dialogue, anything that might weaken or complicate the holistic force of their creation, to its total impression.”


The result is a monochromatic system of information. Celebrity courtiers, masquerading as journalists, experts and specialists, identify our problems and patiently explain the parameters. All those who argue outside the imposed parameters are dismissed as irrelevant cranks, extremists or members of a radical left. Prescient social critics, from Ralph Nader to Noam Chomsky, are banished. Acceptable opinions have a range of A to B. The culture, under the tutelage of these corporate courtiers, becomes, as Huxley noted, a world of cheerful conformity, as well as an endless and finally fatal optimism. We busy ourselves buying products that promise to change our lives, make us more beautiful, confident or successful as we are steadily stripped of rights, money and influence. All messages we receive through these systems of communication, whether on the nightly news or talk shows like “Oprah,” promise a brighter, happier tomorrow. And this, as Wolin points out, is “the same ideology that invites corporate executives to exaggerate profits and conceal losses, but always with a sunny face.” We have been entranced, as Wolin writes, by “continuous technological advances” that “encourage elaborate fantasies of individual prowess, eternal youthfulness, beauty through surgery, actions measured in nanoseconds: a dream-laden culture of ever-expanding control and possibility, whose denizens are prone to fantasies because the vast majority have imagination but little scientific knowledge.”


Our manufacturing base has been dismantled. Speculators and swindlers have looted the U.S. Treasury and stolen billions from small shareholders who had set aside money for retirement or college. Civil liberties, including habeas corpus and protection from warrantless wiretapping, have been taken away. Basic services, including public education and health care, have been handed over to the corporations to exploit for profit. The few who raise voices of dissent, who refuse to engage in the corporate happy talk, are derided by the corporate establishment as freaks.

Attitudes and temperament have been cleverly engineered by the corporate state, as with Huxley’s pliant characters in “Brave New World.” The book’s protagonist, Bernard Marx, turns in frustration to his girlfriend Lenina:

“Don’t you wish you were free, Lenina?” he asks.

“I don’t know that you mean. I am free, free to have the most wonderful time. Everybody’s happy nowadays.”

He laughed, “Yes, ‘Everybody’s happy nowadays.’ We have been giving the children that at five. But wouldn’t you like to be free to be happy in some other way, Lenina? In your own way, for example; not in everybody else’s way.”

“I don’t know what you mean,” she repeated.

The façade is crumbling. And as more and more people realize that they have been used and robbed, we will move swiftly from Huxley’s “Brave New World” to Orwell’s “1984.” The public, at some point, will have to face some very unpleasant truths. The good-paying jobs are not coming back. The largest deficits in human history mean that we are trapped in a debt peonage system that will be used by the corporate state to eradicate the last vestiges of social protection for citizens, including Social Security. The state has devolved from a capitalist democracy to neo-feudalism. And when these truths become apparent, anger will replace the corporate-imposed cheerful conformity. The bleakness of our post-industrial pockets, where some 40 million Americans live in a state of poverty and tens of millions in a category called “near poverty,” coupled with the lack of credit to save families from foreclosures, bank repossessions and bankruptcy from medical bills, means that inverted totalitarianism will no longer work.

We increasingly live in Orwell’s Oceania, not Huxley’s The World State. Osama bin Laden plays the role assumed by Emmanuel Goldstein in “1984.” Goldstein, in the novel, is the public face of terror. His evil machinations and clandestine acts of violence dominate the nightly news. Goldstein’s image appears each day on Oceania’s television screens as part of the nation’s “Two Minutes of Hate” daily ritual. And without the intervention of the state, Goldstein, like bin Laden, will kill you. All excesses are justified in the titanic fight against evil personified.

The psychological torture of Pvt. Bradley Manning—who has now been imprisoned for seven months without being convicted of any crime—mirrors the breaking of the dissident Winston Smith at the end of “1984.” Manning is being held as a “maximum custody detainee” in the brig at Marine Corps Base Quantico, in Virginia. He spends 23 of every 24 hours alone. He is denied exercise. He cannot have a pillow or sheets for his bed. Army doctors have been plying him with antidepressants. The cruder forms of torture of the Gestapo have been replaced with refined Orwellian techniques, largely developed by government psychologists, to turn dissidents like Manning into vegetables. We break souls as well as bodies. It is more effective. Now we can all be taken to Orwell’s dreaded Room 101 to become compliant and harmless. These “special administrative measures” are regularly imposed on our dissidents, including Syed Fahad Hashmi, who was imprisoned under similar conditions for three years before going to trial. The techniques have psychologically maimed thousands of detainees in our black sites around the globe. They are the staple form of control in our maximum security prisons where the corporate state makes war on our most politically astute underclass—African-Americans. It all presages the shift from Huxley to Orwell.

“Never again will you be capable of ordinary human feeling,” Winston Smith’s torturer tells him in “1984.” “Everything will be dead inside you. Never again will you be capable of love, or friendship, or joy of living, or laughter, or curiosity, or courage, or integrity. You will be hollow. We shall squeeze you empty and then we shall fill you with ourselves.”

The noose is tightening. The era of amusement is being replaced by the era of repression. Tens of millions of citizens have had their e-mails and phone records turned over to the government. We are the most monitored and spied-on citizenry in human history. Many of us have our daily routine caught on dozens of security cameras. Our proclivities and habits are recorded on the Internet. Our profiles are electronically generated. Our bodies are patted down at airports and filmed by scanners. And public service announcements, car inspection stickers, and public transportation posters constantly urge us to report suspicious activity. The enemy is everywhere.

Those who do not comply with the dictates of the war on terror, a war which, as Orwell noted, is endless, are brutally silenced. The draconian security measures used to cripple protests at the G-20 gatherings in Pittsburgh and Toronto were wildly disproportionate for the level of street activity. But they sent a clear message—DO NOT TRY THIS. The FBI’s targeting of antiwar and Palestinian activists, which in late September saw agents raid homes in Minneapolis and Chicago, is a harbinger of what is to come for all who dare defy the state’s official Newspeak. The agents—our Thought Police—seized phones, computers, documents and other personal belongings. Subpoenas to appear before a grand jury have since been served on 26 people. The subpoenas cite federal law prohibiting “providing material support or resources to designated foreign terrorist organizations.” Terror, even for those who have nothing to do with terror, becomes the blunt instrument used by Big Brother to protect us from ourselves.

“Do you begin to see, then, what kind of world we are creating?” Orwell wrote. “It is the exact opposite of the stupid hedonistic Utopias that the old reformers imagined. A world of fear and treachery and torment, a world of trampling and being trampled upon, a world which will grow not less but more merciless as it refines itself.”

Chris Hedges is a senior fellow at The Nation Institute. His newest book is “Death of the Liberal Class.”

The Police Murder of Tarika Wilson

On January 4, a police SWAT squad broke into the home of Tarika Wilson in Lima Ohio. They shot Tarika dead and wounded her 14 month old son Sincere. The vocal outrage among Lima’s Black community has revealed a long and bitter history of police racism and brutalization.

LIMA, Ohio — The air of Southside is foul-smelling and thick, filled with fumes from an oil refinery and diesel smoke from a train yard, with talk of riot and recrimination, and with angry questions: Why is Tarika Wilson dead? Why did the police shoot her baby?

“This thing just stinks to high heaven, and the police know it,” said Jason Upthegrove, president of the Lima chapter of the N.A.A.C.P. “We’re not asking for answers anymore. We’re demanding them.”

Some facts are known. A SWAT team arrived at Ms. Wilson’s rented house in the Southside neighborhood early in the evening of Jan. 4 to arrest her companion, Anthony Terry, on suspicion of drug dealing, said Greg Garlock, Lima’s police chief. Officers bashed in the front door and entered with guns drawn, said neighbors who saw the raid.

Moments later, the police opened fire, killing Ms. Wilson, 26, and wounding her 14-month-old son, Sincere, Chief Garlock said. One officer involved in the raid, Sgt. Joseph Chavalia, a 31-year veteran, has been placed on paid administrative leave.

Beyond these scant certainties, there is mostly rumor and rage. The police refuse to give any account of the raid, pending an investigation by the Ohio attorney general.

Black people in Lima, from the poorest citizens to religious and business leaders, complain that rogue police officers regularly stop them without cause, point guns in their faces, curse them and physically abuse them. They say the shooting of Ms. Wilson is only the latest example of a long-running pattern of a few white police officers treating African-Americans as people to be feared.

“There is an evil in this town,” said C. M. Manley, 68, pastor of New Morning Star Missionary Baptist Church. “The police harass me. They harass my family. But they know that if something happens to me, people will burn down this town.”

Internal investigations have uncovered no evidence of police misconduct, Chief Garlock said. Still, local officials recognize that the perception of systemic racism has opened a wide chasm.

Surrounded by farm country known for its German Catholic roots and conservative politics, Lima is the only city in the immediate area with a significant African-American population. Black families, including Mr. Manley’s, came to Lima in the 1940s and ’50s for jobs at what is now the Husky Energy Lima Refinery and other factories along the city’s southern border. Blacks make up 27 percent of the city’s 38,000 people, Mr. Berger said.

Many blacks still live downwind from the refinery. Many whites on the police force commute from nearby farm towns, where a black face is about as common as a twisty road. Of Lima’s 77 police officers, two are African-American.

If I have any frustration when I retire, it’ll be that I wasn’t able to bring more racial balance to the police force,” said Chief Garlock, who joined the force in 1971 and has been chief for 11 years.

Tarika Wilson had six children, ages 8 to 1. They were fathered by five men, all of whom dealt drugs, said Darla Jennings, Ms. Wilson’s mother. But Ms. Wilson never took drugs nor allowed them to be sold from her house, said Tania Wilson, her sister.

“She took great care of those kids, without much help from the fathers, and the community respected her for that,” said Ms. Wilson’s uncle, John Austin.

Tarika Wilson’s companion, Mr. Terry, was the subject of a long-term drug investigation, Chief Garlock said, but Ms. Wilson was never a suspect.

During the raid, Ms. Wilson’s youngest son, Sincere, was shot in the left shoulder and hand. Three weeks after the shooting, he remains in fair condition, said a spokeswoman at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus.

Within minutes of the shooting, at around 8 p.m., 50 people gathered outside Ms. Wilson’s home and shouted obscenities at the police, neighbors said. The next day, 300 people gathered at the house and marched two miles to City Hall.
“The police can say whatever they want,” Tania Wilson said. “Even before they shot my sister, I didn’t trust them.”

More Than Half of ‘Armed’ Suspects Shot by LA Sheriff Were Not Armed

A new study has found that in most shootings in which Los Angeles County Sheriff’s deputies fired at suspects who appeared to be reaching for a weapon, the suspect turned out to be unarmed. And in the last six years, all but two of those people shot were black and Latino, according to the study by the Police Assessment Resource Center for LA County Supervisors.
Over the past six years, approximately 61 percent of all suspects shot because an officer believed they were armed were confirmed to be unarmed at the time of the shooting. A little more than half of those suspects were holding an object such as a cell phone or sunglasses that was believed by deputies to be a possible firearm.
The analysis also found that 61 percent of those shot at by deputies were Latino, 29 percent black and 10 percent white. The LA Times provides some more context: “Waistband shootings” are particularly controversial because the justification for the shootings can conceivably be fabricated after the fact, according to the county monitor’s report. The monitor was careful to point out that the report wasn’t making the case deputies were being dishonest, simply that the spike in those shootings left the department vulnerable to criticism.
Merrick Bobb, special counsel to the county Board of Supervisors, also found a rise in shootings in which deputies didn’t see an actual gun before firing. In those cases, the person may have had a weapon on them, but never brandished it.
Those shootings spiked by 50% last year, according to the report. Last year also had the highest proportion of people shot by deputies who turned out to be unarmed altogether.
The sheriff’s department says these figures are not surprising because deputies patrol areas in south and east Los Angeles County that are home to “a plethora of black and Latino gangs,” the San Jose Mercury News reported.
But Bobb, the special council to county supervisors and the author of the report says training and time on the job has a lot to do with how officers react when suspects hands move. “Knowing that black and Latino men are more likely to be shot or shot at … the sheriff’s department should be doing a better job to reduce as far as possible mistaken shootings,” Bobb wrote.
His report found that in almost a third of shootings deputies had received no relevant training in the past two years.